An Allegheny County judge found a former Pittsburgh police officer guilty of involuntary manslaughter and driving under the influence, but not guilty of homicide by vehicle in a non-jury trial involving a deadly off-duty accident.

Relatives of victim 28-year-old Jessica Lojak of Fawn Township said they're troubled by what they believe they saw from defendant 31-year-old Adam Lewis as he was led from the courtroom.

"Me and my brother were sitting right behind his wife," said Ryan Lojak, a brother of the victim, "They were taking him out. He just looked over a little bit and he did a little smile and a wink, and it hurt."

Jessica Lojak was killed on Sept. 26, 2010. She was a passenger of Lewis when he crossed the center line and crashed his personal motorcycle head-on into an SUV on Mifflin Road. Lewis was giving Lojak a ride home from his fiancee's bachelorette party. The Lojak family says they've heard nothing from Lewis since her death more than three years ago.

"No cards, no calls, no nothing. And then he walks out the way he did out of the courtroom. Where's the justice?" asked Rhonda Lojak, an aunt of victim.

Ryan Lojak said "It's just tough. You don't know if he's getting everything he deserves or not and it's just hard to deal with. But nothing he gets is going to bring my sister back."

The family struggles with the loss.

"It has totally ripped my family apart. Jessica was the pillar of our family. She took care of her grandfather, her grandmother. who died six months later, due to the broken heart," said Rhonda Lojak.

Adams' defense attorney, Bill Difenderfer, said, "These things are gut-wrenching for the victims. My family, my defendant (are) also grieving over the entire matter. These kinds of cases, there are no winners."

"I anticipate gut-wrenching victim impact statements, and I can only imagine. Our hearts go out to the victims," said Difenderfer.

Judge Jeffrey Manning said in court that the evidence showed Lewis was driving his motorcycle from 15 to 20 mph faster than the 25 mph speed limit. Lewis' blood alcohol level was 0.108 and the legal limit in Pennsylvania is 0.08.

Relatives of the victim will be able to tell their side of the story in victim impact statements before Judge Jeffrey Manning, before he sentences Lewis on Jan. 6, 2014. For now, Lewis remains free on bond and is under electronic home monitoring.

"In many ways we're pleased with the verdict for sentencing purposes, but you know my client's still possibly facing jail," said Difenderfer.